Abstract:
The	bat	family	Nycteridae	contains	only	the	genus	Nycteris,	which	comprises	13	currently	recognized	species	from	Africa	and	the	Arabian	Peninsula,	one	species	from	Madagascar,	and	two	species	restricted	to	Malaysia	and	Indonesia	in	South‐East	Asia.	We	investigated	genetic	variation,	clade	membership,	and	phylogenetic	relationships	in	Nycteridae	with	broad	sampling	across	Africa	for	most	clades.	We	sequenced	mitochondrial	cytochrome	b	(cytb)	and	four	independent	nuclear	introns	(2,166	bp)	from	253	individuals.	Although	our	samples	did	not	include	all	recognized	species,	we	recovered	at	least	16	deeply	divergent	monophyletic	lineages	using	independent	mitochondrial	and	multilocus	nuclear	datasets	in	both	gene	tree	and	species	tree	analyses.	Mean	pairwise	uncorrected	genetic	distances	among	species‐ranked	Nycteris	clades	(17%	for	cytb	and	4%	for	concatenated	introns)	suggest	high	levels	of	phylogenetic	diversity	in	Nycteridae.	We	found	a	large	number	of	designated	clades	whose	members	are	distributed	wholly	or	partly	in	East	Africa	(10	of	16	clades),	indicating	that	Nycteris	diversity	has	been	historically	underestimated	and	raising	the	possibility	that	additional	unsampled	and/or	undescribed	Nycteris	species	occur	in	more	poorly	sampled	Central	and	West	Africa.	Well‐resolved	mitochondrial,	concatenated	nuclear,	and	species	trees	strongly	supported	African	ancestry	for	SE	Asian	species.	Species	tree	analyses	strongly	support	two	deeply	diverged	subclades	that	have	not	previously	been	recognized,	and	these	clades	may	warrant	recognition	as	subgenera.	Our	analyses	also	strongly	support	four	traditionally	recognized	species	groups	of	Nycteris.	Mitonuclear	discordance	regarding	geographic	population	structure	in	Nycteris thebaica	appears	to	result	from	male‐biased	dispersal	in	this	species.	Our	analyses,	almost	wholly	based	on	museum	voucher	specimens,	serve	to	identify	species‐rank	clades	that	can	be	tested	with	independent	datasets,	such	as	morphology,	vocalizations,	distributions,	and	ectoparasites.	Our	analyses	highlight	the	need	for	a	comprehensive	revision	of	Nycteridae.